ABSTRACT

Landscape and branding explores the way landscape is conceptualised, conceived, represented and designed by professionals in a brand-driven age.

Landscape - incorporating tangible physical space as well as intangible concepts, narratives, images, and experiences of place - is constructed by a number of creative industries. This book tests the hypothesis that place branding, a powerful marketing and management practice, increasingly blurs the distinction between the promotion of landscape and its production in design terms. Place branding involves the strategic and systematic composition of single-minded, experiential and market-friendly place identities which are consistently communicated across various media, including physical space. How does this implicate or transform notions of place, nature, landscape experience, and the qualitative value of landscape itself? How does this affect the role of landscape architecture?

To answer these questions, place branding theory and practice is critically examined alongside an in depth case study of one specific landscape - the Blue Mountains (Australia). Projects undertaken between 1995 and 2015, including a branding strategy for the region, media campaigns, television, cinema, and several landscape architectural works in the public and private domain are comparatively analysed, focusing on the discourse, conventions and values informing their production, and the landscape narratives they convey.

chapter |3 pages

Preamble

chapter |9 pages

Interlude

Striding towards branded landscape identities – the evolution of national park promotion and production

chapter |30 pages

Form follows focus group

Understanding place branding

chapter |9 pages

Interlude

Walking tracks

chapter |19 pages

‘Repositioning' mountains

The Brand Blue Mountains framework

chapter |6 pages

Interlude

Walkabout

chapter |25 pages

Calculated aesthetics

Promoting the landscape on surfaces and screens

chapter |5 pages

Interlude

‘Morning walks through silvered leaves in whispering groves …'

chapter |27 pages

The public realm

Place branding and place making

chapter |26 pages

Mass-mediating the landscape

Surfaces, screens and sites at Echo Point

chapter |4 pages

Interlude

Amble

chapter |17 pages

Beyond branding?